The incitement of ideas

by Caroline Glick
February 18, 2005 

Last Friday night, the TV stations were in a frenzy over the 
right-wing incitement against Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's 
plan to withdraw from Gaza and northern Samaria and to 
expel all Jews living in these areas from their homes and 
communities. Channel 2 devoted fully a third of its hour-long 
news broadcast to the issue -- super-imposing images of the 
political protests against the Oslo Accords in the months 
before Yitzhak Rabin's assassination with footage from the 
recent mass rally and protests against Sharon's withdrawal plan. 

Much was made of the fact that right-wing activist Itamar 
Ben-Gvir yelled at Education Minister Limor Livnat at the 
memorial service for the slain Jewish underground leader 
from the pre-statehood days, Avraham Stern. Ben-Gvir told her 
(probably correctly) that Stern would never have approved her 
support for Sharon's plan. 

It was unpleasant seeing Ben-Gvir and his nasty friends 
following Livnat and yelling at her. But then again, how was 
their behavior different from that of members of Knesset who 
insult and curse one other as a matter of course? 
Why is this news? 

Then there is the pseudo-attack against Finance Minister 
Binyamin Netanyahu at Kfar Habad last Thursday night. 
The initial reports claimed that a group of anti-withdrawal 
thugs slashed Netanyahu's tires and surrounded him, yelling, 
as he tried to make it to his disabled car. He was spirited 
away in another vehicle, escaping, so the reports had us 
believe, by the skin of his teeth. 

After the matter was duly investigated, it worked out that 
Netanyahu's tires had not been slashed; he may simply have 
had a flat tire. And that no group of hooligans had surrounded 
him; one teenager had yelled at him. According to Amnon 
Abramovich, from Channel 2, this teenager had actually been 
asked to yell at Netanyahu by a journalist at the scene who 
told him what to say and even sent him a "thank you for a 
job well done" text message on his cellular phone. 

In the meantime, in light of these major infractions on the 
apparent right of public servants to receive no unpleasant 
criticism for their support of highly controversial policies, 
Sunday, Interior Security Minister Gideon Ezra called for 
inciters -- including people writing nasty graffiti on city 
streets -- to be placed under administrative detention. 

For his part, Sharon has castigated anyone who calls for 
a referendum on his withdrawal program as contributing to 
incitement and indeed as advancing the cause of civil war. 
In a speech last week Sharon said, "The idea of holding a 
national referendum is an attempt to delay the implementation 
of the Disengagement Plan." He went on to say, "The inciters 
use threats of civil war in order to influence the public who 
wants disengagement but prefers quiet. A national referendum 
will bring about an increase in incitement." 

So for the prime minister of Israel, anyone who claims that 
the Israeli voters have a right to weigh in on what is perhaps 
the most controversial plan ever adopted by an Israeli 
government is playing a direct role in inciting a civil war. 

This is a shocking statement for two reasons. First, it shows 
the utter disdain the prime minister feels for his people who 
he clearly doesn't believe are capable of responsibly exercising 
the freedom to choose. Second, Sharon is effectively saying 
that anyone who calls for the people to be given the right to 
choose is guilty of fomenting a rebellion. That is, he has 
relegated all of his political opponents to criminal status. 

This week saw MK Effi Eitam thrown out of the Knesset's 
Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee when he argued 
with Sharon for accusing parliamentarians who are opposed 
to his plan of incitement. Apparently, committee chairman 
Yuval Steinitz is unaware that in a democracy, one of the 
main functions of a parliament is to enable free and fair -- 
often rancorous -- debate of the issues of the day, and that 
it is the responsibility of legislators to call leaders to 
account for their actions and policies. 

Then there is democratically challenged Transportation 
Minister (and former justice minister) Meir Sheetrit. 
On Monday, Sheetrit told Israel radio that as far as he is 
concerned, Likud party members are guilty of incitement 
when they write letters to Likud MKs informing them that 
future political support for these politicians is dependent 
on their voting against the withdrawal and expulsion plan. 
That is, in Sheetrit's view, it is incitement for constituents 
to base their support for politicians on the extent to which
those politicians advance their interests while in office. 

The most amazing aspect of the entire "incitement" craze 
is that, as Shin Bet Director Avi Dichter explained this week, 
statements by opponents of Sharon's plan have no influence 
over potential assassins. According to Dichter, there are 
some 500 people floating around who fit the psychological 
profile of a potential assassin. Like Rabin's assassin, 
Yigal Amir, and John Hinckley Jr. who attempted to 
assassinate US president Ronald Reagan in 1981 these 
individuals are not members of any organization or group. 

Rather, potential assassins are sociopaths with messianic 
protestations of divine selection. People of Amir's ilk are not 
moved by what leaders say. They are moved by their own 
delusions of grandeur and sense of alienation. They would 
murder even if no one were in the streets protesting against 
Sharon's plan. 

But in the meantime, rather than focusing their attentions 
on finding and neutralizing the threat posed by such 
sociopaths, our political leadership is moving to demonize 
and criminalize the huge swath of the Israeli public who 
opposes Sharon s policy of withdrawal and expulsion. 

In advancing this objective which, if allowed to continue, 
will destroy Israeli democracy the government has been 
ably assisted by the media. The news media's advocacy of 
Sharon s withdrawal plan has been shockingly brazen. 
Opponents of the plan, when given any airtime at all, 
find themselves under attack. 

Rather than allowing people like MK Gideon Sa'ar or 
Binyamin Regional Council Chairman Pinchas Wallerstein 
to explain why it is that they oppose the plan, radio and 
television left-wing partisans posing as objective journalists 
attack them for their role in contributing to the "atmosphere 
of incitement," and pointedly demand that they justify their 
disloyal and dangerous behavior. On the other hand, these 
pretend journalists shamelessly pander to Sharon's supporters, 
such as Deputy Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who is 
constantly handed softball questions by fawning hacks 
commiserating with him about the dangerous extremists on 
the right who are just about to kill Sharon. 

Because, as far as these paragons of the free press are 
concerned, it is a foregone conclusion that Sharon will be 
assassinated. On Sunday, under a headline that proclaimed 
"The Fear: A Jewish Suicide Attacker," a Yediot Aharonot 
sub-head asserted, "The question isn't whether they will try 
to assassinate the prime minister, the question is how." 
Alex Fishman, the paper s military "reporter," detailed the 
likelihood of a Jewish suicide bomber breaking through 
Sharon's security cordon and then pushing the button. 
The entire article was devoid of sourcing, facts or even 
grounded suspicions. But then, what can we expect from 
the most widely read newspaper in the country? 
Certainly not that it accurately report the news. 

Back in 1798, the US Congress passed the Sedition Act. 
The act, which was aimed at silencing political criticism 
of president John Adams' administration, was dressed up 
as a precaution against what at that time was an imminent 
threat of war between the US and France. The act made it 
a criminal offense to criticize the government, and its 
enforcement brought about the imprisonment of a number 
of anti-Adams newspaper publishers and editors. 

This fundamentally unconstitutional and anti-democratic 
law was allowed to lapse. But if it had remained in effect, 
would it have prevented four American presidents from 
being assassinated in later years? Given the profile of 
political assassins, it strains credulity to think so. 
On the other hand, one thing is clear beyond doubt: 
Had the Sedition Act remained the law of the land, 
democracy in America would have been destroyed. 

US Supreme Court Chief Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes 
once famously said, "Every idea is an incitement." 
And in a democracy, ideas -- that is incitement -- are 
supposed to flow uninhibited. Indeed, ideas -- from the 
idiotic to the sublime -- are the stuff of democratic societies. 
The constant incitement of competing ideas is what 
differentiates democracies from tyrannies. 

The failure of Sharon, his allies and underlings -- like the 
failure of his apparatchiks who run the country's media -- 
to understand that just as an elected government has 
the legal right to set policy, so does its political opposition 
have a legal right to protest its policies as loudly, nastily 
and unaesthetically as they wish, exposes a singular failure 
of our political and cultural elite to adopt the habits of 
democracy. 

The main victim of this terrible reality is, of course, the 
Israeli public, which has not been afforded an opportunity 
to hear any significant debate or discussion of Sharon's plan 
to uproot thousands of Jews from their homes and withdraw 
Israeli forces from Gaza and northern Samaria. 
This policy -- arguably the most controversial plan ever to 
be adopted by an Israeli government -- is being bulldozed 
through to implementation without Sharon or his allies 
ever satisfactorily explaining how it will advance Israel's 
security or political interests. 

Sharon has not explained how turning Gaza over the 
Palestinians will enhance Israeli security. 

He has not explained how Israel will protect itself from 
rocket and mortar attacks on Ashkelon, Ashdod or Netivot 
after the withdrawal. 

He has never explained why it is necessary to give the 
Palestinians the communities in northern Gaza - Dugit, 
Alei Sinai and Nissanit - which are geographically 
indistinguishable from Ashkelon and whose heights control 
the entire area. 

He has never explained how Israel will be able to defend 
the strategic sites like the Ashkelon power station and 
the Ashkelon-Eilat oil pipeline with Hamas roaming freely 
on those heights. 

He has never explained why it is necessary for Israel to 
remove itself to the 1949 armistice lines, rather than retain 
the areas necessary for its security and what Israeli 
acceptance of these lines in Gaza means for future 
negotiations regarding Judea and Samaria and Jerusalem. 

Because of the absence of real debate in the Knesset or 
in the press, and the concerted effort by the government 
and the media to criminalize political speech, the Israeli 
public is being denied the one thing that distinguishes a 
democracy from a tyranny: the ability of the citizenry to 
make informed decisions and to hold their leaders 
accountable for their actions.